Dutch leaders condemn 'criminal' clashes at
anti-lockdown protests
PM says violence seen in Eindhoven, Amsterdam and
elsewhere at the weekend was unacceptable
Jon Henley Europe correspondent
@jonhenley
Mon 25 Jan
2021 13.58 GMT
Political
leaders and local officials in the Netherlands have condemned as “criminals”
and “scum” the rioters who clashed with police during violent protests at the
weekend against the country’s first nationwide curfew since the second world
war.
More than
240 people were arrested as police used teargas and water cannon to disperse
crowds of several hundred protesters in Amsterdam and Eindhoven on Sunday.
Trouble also flared in a dozen other towns across the country.
“It’s
unacceptable,” the prime minister, Mark Rutte, said on Monday. “This has
nothing to do with protesting. It is criminal violence and that’s how we’ll
treat it.” He said the 9pm curfew introduced on Saturday was necessary and
would remain in place.
Eindhoven
was worst hit by the unrest, with rioters setting fire to cars, smashing
windows, throwing rocks and fireworks at police, and looting a supermarket and
other shops. The local mayor, John Jorritsma, said his city was “crying, and so
am I”.
Jorritsma
called the rioters “scum of the earth”, adding that he was “afraid that if we
continue down this path we will be on our way to civil war”. When police said
the protesters were violating lockdown rules, “they took weapons out of their
pockets and immediately attacked the police,” Jorritsma said.
Other
officials said the violence was not caused by people concerned primarily about
their civil liberties. “These demonstrations are being hijacked by people who
only want one thing, and that is to riot,” said the Nijmegen mayor, Hubert
Bruls. “This is not demonstrating. These are coronavirus hooligans.”
More than
50 people were arrested in Eindhoven, police said, while in Amsterdam about 190
rioters were detained after police deployed water cannon, dogs and officers on
horseback during a banned demonstration on the city’s Museumplein.
Military
police were sent as reinforcements to at least two towns. In the eastern city
of Enschede, rioters threw rocks at the windows of a hospital, and on Saturday
night youths in the fishing village of Urk set fire to a coronavirus test
centre.
The police
trade union, NPB, said there could be more trouble ahead as people grow
increasingly frustrated with the country’s months-long lockdown. “We haven’t
seen so much violence in 40 years,” said one union official, Koen Simmers.
Rutte and
his cabinet resigned on 22 January over a child benefits scandal in which more
than 20,000 families were wrongly accused of fraud by the tax office, but they
continue to govern in a caretaker capacity until elections scheduled for 17
March.
Schools and
non-essential shops have been closed in the Netherlands since mid-December, and
bars and restaurants were closed in October. The curfew was added because of
fears over the more contagious British variant of the virus.
People who
violate the 9pm to 4.30am curfew face a €95 fine. There are exemptions, in
particular for people attending funerals or having to work, but they must
present a certificate.
Besides the
curfew, Rutte also announced last week a ban on flights from Britain, South
Africa and South America, and lowered the number of guests allowed into
people’s homes to one, from the previous limit of two.
“There is
absolutely no excuse” for the rioting, the overseas development minister,
Sigrid Kaag, told Dutch television on Monday. “This is violence, and I hope the
police track down all these people and that there are heavy punishments.”


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